ECG and EDA stress in a slim band: Full ECG, electrodermal activity stress sensing, SpO2, and continuous heart rate in a tracker thinner than most smartwatches.
Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming
Updated July 13, 2026 · 6 picks, ranked
Fitness bands are the value end of wearables: most of the health tracking of a smartwatch at a fraction of the price, with battery life measured in weeks. They're also refreshed on quiet, predictable cycles that most buyers never notice — which is exactly when overpaying happens.
This list ranks the current generation of fitness trackers and screen-light bands. Each pick shows where it sits in its release cycle, so you'll know whether to buy today or wait a few weeks for the successor.
ECG and EDA stress in a slim band: Full ECG, electrodermal activity stress sensing, SpO2, and continuous heart rate in a tracker thinner than most smartwatches.
Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming
Brighter AMOLED at under $40: The Smart Band 10's 1.72" display peaks at 1500 nits — 200 nits brighter than the Band 9 — making it more readable in sunlight, all for around $40.
Overdue for a refresh — no successor announced yet. Prices should be at their lowest
WHOOP Age — healthspan tracking: WHOOP 5.0 gives you a biological age score derived from your sleep, recovery, and training habits — showing whether your lifestyle is ageing you faster or slower than your years. Updated daily, it makes long-term health trends visible at a glance.
Early in release cycle
$99 with no subscription: Unlike WHOOP, there is no mandatory membership — pay $99 once and use Fitbit Air with the free Google Health app. Google Health Premium ($9.99/month) is optional.
First-generation product — no historical cycle data to predict a successor
18-day battery at under $50: 18 days of typical use with health monitoring — nearly 3 weeks without charging, far beyond any smartwatch competitor.
Overdue for a refresh — no successor announced yet. Prices should be at their lowest
Garmin Body Battery in a band: Body Battery energy monitoring — the feature Garmin is known for — in a wristband that's thinner than most fitness trackers.
Late in cycle — a new model is likely coming
| Model | Price | Battery | Weight | Water res. | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fitbit Charge | $120 | ~7 d | 15 g | 50m | ⏰ Wait |
| Xiaomi Smart Band 10 | $40 | ~21 d | 16 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Wait |
| WHOOP 5.0 | — | ~14 d | 27 g | 10ATM | ⏰ Buy now |
| Fitbit Air | $99 | ~7 d | 12 g | 50m | ⏰ Buy now |
| Amazfit Band 7 | $50 | ~18 d | 28 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Wait |
| Garmin vivosmart 5 | $149 | ~7 d | 25 g | 5ATM | ⏰ Wait |
Get a tracker if you mainly want steps, sleep, heart rate and long battery life at a low price. Get a smartwatch if you want apps, calls and notifications on your wrist. Trackers win on battery and price by a wide margin.
Only if you'll actually use the recovery coaching. The hardware is often cheap or free, but the subscription costs more than a mid-range band every single year — our Whoop page runs the numbers against buy-once alternatives.
Current-generation bands only, scored on tracking quality, battery life and value, with release-cycle position as the tiebreak and the source of each buy/wait badge. Superseded models are excluded from the ranking but often make excellent clearance buys — check their device pages.
Rankings combine our editor scores with live release-cycle data and are recomputed on every site update. See how we rate.